Explore Verses Related to Worm
At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
Serves as a powerful divine sign (ayah) demonstrating Allah's absolute power, the limitations of created beings (jinn), and the reality of death and decay.
Acts as a humble instrument of Allah's will to reveal a profound truth—the death of Prophet Solomon (Sulayman).
💭 Theological Perspective
Represents the natural process of decay that the human body undergoes, a reminder of mortality and the return to earth.
Symbolizes hidden elements, decay, and earthliness, serving as a reminder of humility and the unseen aspects of existence.
The story of the worm and Solomon's staff is a lesson (ibrah) that knowledge of the unseen (al-ghayb) belongs only to Allah, not to jinn or humans.
Contemplating the role of the smallest creatures, like the worm, can inspire humility, gratitude, and reflection on Allah's magnificent creation.
📜 Hadith Perspective
While not directly mentioned, hadith literature emphasizes reflecting on Allah's creation, the signs of death, and the certainty of resurrection.
- The certainty of death and decay
- The preservation of the bodies of prophets.
- Humility before Allah's creation
Scholars unanimously agree on the narrative of 34:14, where a creature, identified as a worm or termite, ate Solomon's staff.
💎 Deeper Insights
The 'Worm of the Earth' serves as the ultimate fact-checker for the unseen. While the powerful jinn operated on an illusion for up to a year, this humble creature was tasked by Allah to reveal the ground truth, demonstrating that ultimate reality is governed by divine decree, not by the perception of powerful beings.
— Ibn Kathir, Al-Qurtubi
The story presents a divine irony: the jinn were masters of construction, building great monuments for Solomon, yet they could not perceive the deconstruction of a simple wooden staff happening right before them. This highlights that mastery over the physical world grants no access to the metaphysical reality of life and death.
— Al-Tabari, Tafsir al-Jalalayn
